World food day: Mali hunger crisis deepens

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Malnutrition in Mali – Medical workers at the clinic in Kati, measure the upper arm of Bourama Togo. The result shows that he is suffering from acute malnutrition.

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Malnutrition in Mali – Water-borne diseases such as diarrhea are among the biggest killers of malnourished and vulnerable children. The IRC is repairing and rehabilitating water, sanitation, and waste management systems at six Malian health centers that serve thousands of people weekly.

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Malnutrition in Mali – This health center in Kati, near the Malian capital of Bamako, has treated scores of malnourished children, victims of Mali's growing hunger crisis. Although most of the children are nourished back to health, six have died at the clinic since June.

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Malnutrition in Mali – Only 16-months old, Jabadjie arrived at the health center in Kati weighing a little more than 9 pounds and suffering from pneumonia and anemia. Her normal weight should be twice that.

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Malnutrition in Mali – This boy was identified as suffering from acute severe malnutrition by IRC aid workers who visited his village. He was rushed to a health clinic for treatment and is now back home in the care of his grandmother. The IRC also provides milk and nutritional supplements to children who are at risk of falling back into malnutrition.

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Malnutrition in Mali – The drought has devastated the already dry Sahel region. Crops have failed, and the lean season—when food from the last harvest has run out—has arrived early. Food is available in the markets, but prices are too high for the poorest people. Here, Lamine Samaké, from the village of Diallakoroba, shows his empty grain storage hut. "This time last year it was almost full with millet," he says.

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Malnutrition in Mali – This young girl fled with her family to Bamako from Gao, a town in the north of Mali that is now controlled by Islamic extremists. More than 320,000 Malians have fled the north in search of food or safety, 200,000 of them seeking sanctuary in neighboring Niger, Burkina Faso and Mauritania. The remaining 120,000 are internally displaced.

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Story highlights

More than 300,000 people have fled northern Mali in search of food or safety after drought and rebel uprising

Secular rebels in north Mali broke away from the capital, Bamako, in March but have lost the territory to militant Islamist groups

The International Rescue Committee is fighting to control malnutrition in the Kati district, near Bamako, which has been hard hit by the food crisis

Prolonged drought has destroyed food stocks in large areas of the Sahel region of West Africa

The heat inside the small medical clinic is stifling. An occasional breeze from an open window provides the only relief. A dozen lethargic children, their ribs exposed and twig-like arms outstretched, lay on beds covered by mosquito nets.

I accompany Keita Cheick Oumar, a doctor with the International Rescue Committee (IRC), as he checks on patients in a health clinic located in the densely populated Kati district, near the Malian capital of Bamako. Kati district has been hard hit by Mali's deepening hunger crisis and as elsewhere in the country the crisis is having an especially devastating impact on children.

Dr. Oumar kneels in front of Jabadjie, a ghost of a child whose loose skin sags over a skeletal frame. She is 16 months old and weighs only a little over 9 pounds (4 kg). In addition to being severely malnourished, Jabadjie is suffering from pneumonia and anemia that have ravaged her weakened immune system.

Jabadjie was rushed to the clinic after she was found by IRC volunteers who travel throughout Kati district to identify malnourished children and inform villagers about the help available at the health clinic.

"If she had stayed in the village, she would have died for sure," Dr. Oumar says.

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He instructs Jabadjie's mother, who has come to the clinic with her daughter, on how to feed the girl nutritionally fortified peanut paste.

Although malnutrition is not unknown in Mali -- in the past decade, the country has faced three droughts which all led to major food shortages -- this year the country has struggled to cope with a prolonged drought and food crisis that is affecting large areas of the Sahel region of West Africa. The crisis has been made worse by a spreading internal conflict.

More than 320,000 Malians have fled the north in search of food or safety, 200,000 of them seeking sanctuary in neighboring Niger, Burkina Faso and Mauritania. The remaining 120,000 are internally displaced.

Jabadjie's mother, Masaran Diarra, explains that food in her village ran out months ago.

"We are farmers and normally grow peanuts and millet, but we have nothing to eat now," she says. "I have five children to feed and one more on the way."

Two weeks after being admitted to the clinic, Jabadjie seems to be out of danger. Although still shockingly thin, her protein levels are up and the edema, a swelling caused by the build-up of fluid beneath the skin, has disappeared.

An hour's drive south of the Bamako, in the village of Diallakoroba, I meet a group of farmers. They take me to a small hut used to store grain. Lamine Samaké, a 50-year-old father of eight, shines a flashlight through a small window. The hut is empty.

"This time last year it was almost full with millet," he tells me. "We have used up all of our reserves and won't have any millet until the next harvest in January or February."

In the meantime, Samaké says, three families comprising some 30 people will have to survive on a small quantity of corn and, money permitting, the occasional serving of fried fish.

"It won't be enough," he adds, shaking his head. "The months ahead will be very hard."